Doctors Without Borders staff have been wearing full protective clothing to help prevent the spread of disease and have made it clear to local medics that there are no drugs to treat the virus.
Ebola creates holes in blood vessels, often causing bleeding and shock. It does this by killing endothelial cells, which form the blood vessels’ lining and other partitions in the body. When those cells die, blood and other fluids can leak out. Organs shut down.
The virus replicates very quickly, before most people’s bodies can mount an attack. People often have massive bleeding seven to 10 days after infection. It effectively disables the immune system by hampering the development of antibodies and T cells that would target the virus. Scientists are not certain exactly how.
What can be done?
For now, only symptoms can be treated in hopes of keeping people strong enough that their immune systems can catch up. But within the past five years, several experimental vaccines and treatments have been effective in other primates, and it is believed that something could be approved for human use within the next five years.
How does it spread?
The virus is often spread to humans in the contaminated meat of monkeys and other animals. It spreads from human to human through contact with body fluids.
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